Board of Levee Com'rs v. Whitney Trust & Savings Bank

129 So. 658, 171 La. 28, 1930 La. LEXIS 1872
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJune 2, 1930
DocketNo. 30642.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 129 So. 658 (Board of Levee Com'rs v. Whitney Trust & Savings Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Board of Levee Com'rs v. Whitney Trust & Savings Bank, 129 So. 658, 171 La. 28, 1930 La. LEXIS 1872 (La. 1930).

Opinion

O’NIELL, C. J.

The purpose of this suit is to determine the status and security of a bond issue of $2,-200,000, of the board of levee commissioners of the Orleans levee district. The bonds were authorized by an ordinance of the hoard, adopted on the 7th of April, 1030, under the authority to issue bonds to the amount of .$15,000,000, conferred by subsection (i) of section 7 of article 16 of the Constitution, as this section was amended in November, 1928, according to Act No. 292 of 1928.

The defendant Whitney Trust & Savings Bank accepted an offer of the levee board to sell the bank five of the bonds, on the following conditions and representations, viz:

“We hereby offer to sell to you for par and accrued interest five (5) bonds, each for the principal sum of $1,000, being a portion of an issue of bonds authorized under the constitutional amendment embodied in Louisiana Act No. 292 of 1928 and under the ordinance of this board adopted at its meeting held on the seventh day of April 1930, a copy of which is attached, and under the resolution of the Board of Liquidation of the State Debt, adopted at its meeting held on the twenty-eighth day of March, 1930, a copy of which is attached.

“In making this offer we expressly represent to you:

“1. That said bonds are valid obligations of the Board of Commissioners of the Orleans Levee District, enforceable as general obligations of that body in the courts of Louisiana and in the Federal Courts having jurisdiction in Orleans Parish, Louisiana.

“2. That the issue of bonds, of which said bonds are a part are validly secured, not only by the lands, cash, leases, rights, etc., enumerated in paragraph 1 of the amendment embodied in Act 292 of the Louisiana Legislature of 1928, but by the pledge of the taxing power conferred by law upon the Board of Levee Commissioners of the Orleans Levee District, and'that you, as purchaser of said bonds, may, in ease of default of said bonds in principal, interest or charges, compel the exercise of that power by this board through proper judicial proceedings, for the purpose of paying either the interest, the principal or the charges upon same or any of the same as they respectively mature.

. “3. That there is specially pledged and mortgaged to secure these bonds the land to be reclaimed, the cash, notes and other evidences of indebtedness, and the rents, incomes and other advantages accruing from said lands, and generally any and all rights of this board in and to any ‘Land, property, income, revenues, claims, and other choses in action, forming part of and/or arising out of said development,’ and, should this not be adequate to pay these bonds in principal and in interest as it respectively matures, that there is now available and undedieated to *33 other purpose sufficient taxing power, authorized hy the Louisiana Constitution of 1921, particularly Article 16, section 2, remaining in this hoard, to care for the requirements of the issue of bonds of which t'hese bonds are a part; and the sale of this issue of bonds, under the ordinance above referred to, after the proper credits on same derived from the mortgaged or pledged property securing same have been made, dedicates from the aforesaid taxes a sufficient amount to the repayment in full of any amount due as a balance on the interest and principal of aforesaid bonds to the exclusion of other uses of the taxing power, to that extent, of this board.

“4. That the purposes for which said bonds are beirlg sold are purposes for which this board may validly expend its funds, derived from taxation.

“In case you purchase the bonds, your purchase will be upon the express conditions above set forth.”

In pursuance of this offer of sale, signed by the president and by the secretary of the board of levee commissioners, and accepted by the bank, the board tendered to the bank the five bonds, which the band declined to accept, on the ground that the bonds tendered did not conform with the requirements of the contract. The levee board thereupon brought this suit to compel the bank to accept the bonds and pay the price. The case was submitted on a statement of facts, mutually admitted. The civil district court decided in favor of the levee board. The bank has appealed from the decision.

It is not disputed that the payment of the bonds is secured by a mortgage on the lands and the improvements to be made thereon, and by a pledge of the property, leases, incomes, and revenues, arising out of the so-called “Lakefront Improvement Project,” for which these bonds are being issued, under the provisions of the constitutional Amendment of 1928, pursuant to Act No. 292 of 1928. The bank contends that the bonds are not payable out of any other revenues, or collectible from any other source than from the property, leases, incomes and revenues that may result from the reclamation project, called “Lakefront Improvement Project.”

The argument, on behalf of the bank, that these bonds are not the general obligations of the board of levee commissioners of the Orleans levee district, enforceable as such in the courts having jurisdiction in the parish of Orleans, is based upon the idea, expressed in some of the decisions of this court, that levee boards are mere agencies < or functionaries of the state, exercising certain delegated powers belonging to the state government. The cases in which such expressions were used were Fisher v. Steele, Auditor, 39 La. Levee Board, 51 La. Ann. 523, 25 So. 415; State ex rel. Guion, Attorney General v. Board of Levee Commissioners, 124 La. 446, 50 So. 458; Board of Commissioners v. Howard Land & Timber Co., 132 La. 911, 61 So. 868; and State ex rel. Board of Commissioners v. Grace, Register of State Land Office, 161 La. 1039, 109 So. 830. It was not denied, but was in fact acknowledged, in the eases cited, that the levee boards were political corporations, independent of the state, except to the extent that their autonomy, like that of other public corporations, was subject to the will of the Legislature, within its constitutional limitations. And, in’a later’ case, State v. Standard Oil Co., on rehearing, 164 La. 357, 113 So. 867, 875, the expression used in State ex rel. Board of Commissioners v. Grace, Register of State Land Office, was explained thus: “The board is a state agency, of course, just as any other subdivi *35 sion incorporated by an act of tbe Legislature is a state agency; but the board has the right to sue and be sued, and it alone must assert its rights of action. The Attorney General has no right to sue for and in the name of the state on a cause or right of action possessed only by the levee board.” See, also, Board of Commissioners v. Hardtner, 164 La. 632, 114 So. 494. In Board of Commissioners of Caddo Levee District v. Pure Oil Co., 167 La. 801, 120 So. 373, it was held that the levee board was a corporation so distinct and independent that the prescription of three years, under article 3538 of the Civil Code, ran against the levee board, notwithstanding the prescription could not have run against the state.

In the third section of the statute creating this levee board Act No. 93 of 1890, p. 95, the corporation is described thus:

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Bluebook (online)
129 So. 658, 171 La. 28, 1930 La. LEXIS 1872, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/board-of-levee-comrs-v-whitney-trust-savings-bank-la-1930.